Herts and Marinsky advocate for taxpayers, residents and students

Share post:

I moved to West Windsor in 2010. After I had done an extensive search in Central Jersey, I chose this beautiful town, largely because of WW-P’s reputation for high-quality education.

There are a lot of things that I could never imagine are going on. The community is distinctively divided on education in our schools; popular school programs are being slashed; the doubts that the District will spend the money wisely are common; the morale of school teachers is low.

I started asking what had happened and wanted to find out why by attending the monthly BOE meetings from time to time. Every time, I saw Ms. Herts there, who spoke vocally for the benefits of we taxpayers and residents. Her informative letters published in teh WWP News helped me to connect the dots between the unhappy things I mentioned above and a BOE that rubber stamped whichever significant changes the school district administration wanted to make, no matter how unpopular those changes were.

Here is another story to show how I can have trust in Ms. Marinsky. Last weekend, during a chat with my neighbor, he told me after I mentioned why this upcoming BOE election would be important, “I got the campaign flyer of Ms. Herts and Ms. Marinsky in mail and I called my daughter and asked what she thought. You know, she already graduated from the High School South a few years ago. She said she and her classmates all love Ms. Marinsky because she cared about the students and urge me to vote for Ms. Marinsky without any doubt.”

I believe Ms. Herts and Ms. Marinsky will effectively advocate on behalf of West Windsor taxpayers, residents and our students when they are on BOE.

— Jian Lin, West Windsor

Related articles

New Support Program at Capital Health Helps Women Navigate Healing and Intimacy After Cancer Treatment

This sponsored content provided by Capital Health While cancer treatment can be lifesaving, experts at Capital Health Cancer Center...

Lawrence Council approves funding for 2026 road program

The Lawrence Township Council has approved an ordinance appropriating $2.4 million in capital improvement funds for the township's...

Former Lawrence Junior Cardinals treasurer charged with misappropriation of funds

The former treasurer of the Lawrence Junior Cardinals youth football and cheerleading organization has been charged with misappropriation...

I-295 off-ramp at Route 206 closed for construction of noise barrier

The off-ramp at Exit 69B on I-295 has been closed by the New Jersey Department of Transportation in...